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depot_tools/subprocess2.py

204 lines
5.9 KiB
Python

# coding=utf8
# Copyright (c) 2011 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved.
# Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
# found in the LICENSE file.
"""Collection of subprocess wrapper functions.
In theory you shouldn't need anything else in subprocess, or this module failed.
"""
from __future__ import with_statement
import logging
import os
import subprocess
import sys
import tempfile
import time
import threading
# Constants forwarded from subprocess.
PIPE = subprocess.PIPE
STDOUT = subprocess.STDOUT
# Globals.
# Set to True if you somehow need to disable this hack.
SUBPROCESS_CLEANUP_HACKED = False
class CalledProcessError(subprocess.CalledProcessError):
"""Augment the standard exception with more data."""
def __init__(self, returncode, cmd, cwd, stdout, stderr):
super(CalledProcessError, self).__init__(returncode, cmd)
self.stdout = stdout
self.stderr = stderr
self.cwd = cwd
def __str__(self):
out = 'Command %s returned non-zero exit status %s' % (
' '.join(self.cmd), self.returncode)
if self.cwd:
out += ' in ' + self.cwd
return '\n'.join(filter(None, (out, self.stdout, self.stderr)))
def hack_subprocess():
"""subprocess functions may throw exceptions when used in multiple threads.
See http://bugs.python.org/issue1731717 for more information.
"""
global SUBPROCESS_CLEANUP_HACKED
if not SUBPROCESS_CLEANUP_HACKED and threading.activeCount() != 1:
# Only hack if there is ever multiple threads.
# There is no point to leak with only one thread.
subprocess._cleanup = lambda: None
SUBPROCESS_CLEANUP_HACKED = True
def get_english_env(env):
"""Forces LANG and/or LANGUAGE to be English.
Forces encoding to utf-8 for subprocesses.
Returns None if it is unnecessary.
"""
env = env or os.environ
# Test if it is necessary at all.
is_english = lambda name: env.get(name, 'en').startswith('en')
if is_english('LANG') and is_english('LANGUAGE'):
return None
# Requires modifications.
env = env.copy()
def fix_lang(name):
if not is_english(name):
env[name] = 'en_US.UTF-8'
fix_lang('LANG')
fix_lang('LANGUAGE')
return env
def Popen(args, **kwargs):
"""Wraps subprocess.Popen().
Forces English output since it's easier to parse the stdout if it is always in
English.
Sets shell=True on windows by default. You can override this by forcing shell
parameter to a value.
Popen() can throw OSError when cwd or args[0] doesn't exist.
"""
# Make sure we hack subprocess if necessary.
hack_subprocess()
env = get_english_env(kwargs.get('env'))
if env:
kwargs['env'] = env
if not kwargs.get('shell') is None:
# *Sigh*: Windows needs shell=True, or else it won't search %PATH% for the
# executable, but shell=True makes subprocess on Linux fail when it's called
# with a list because it only tries to execute the first item in the list.
kwargs['shell'] = (sys.platform=='win32')
tmp_str = ' '.join(args)
if kwargs.get('cwd', None):
tmp_str += '; cwd=%s' % kwargs['cwd']
logging.debug(tmp_str)
return subprocess.Popen(args, **kwargs)
def call(args, timeout=None, **kwargs):
"""Wraps subprocess.Popen().communicate().
The process will be kill with error code -9 after |timeout| seconds if set.
Automatically passes stdin content as input so do not specify stdin=PIPE.
Returns both communicate() tuple and return code wrapped in a tuple.
"""
stdin = kwargs.pop('stdin', None)
if stdin is not None:
assert stdin != PIPE
# When stdin is passed as an argument, use it as the actual input data and
# set the Popen() parameter accordingly.
kwargs['stdin'] = PIPE
if not timeout:
# Normal workflow.
proc = Popen(args, **kwargs)
if stdin is not None:
out = proc.communicate(stdin)
else:
out = proc.communicate()
else:
# Create a temporary file to workaround python's deadlock.
# http://docs.python.org/library/subprocess.html#subprocess.Popen.wait
# When the pipe fills up, it will deadlock this process. Using a real file
# works around that issue.
with tempfile.TemporaryFile() as buff:
start = time.time()
kwargs['stdout'] = buff
proc = Popen(args, **kwargs)
if stdin is not None:
proc.stdin.write(stdin)
while proc.returncode is None:
proc.poll()
if timeout and (time.time() - start) > timeout:
proc.kill()
proc.wait()
# It's -9 on linux and 1 on Windows. Standardize to -9.
# Do not throw an exception here, the user must use
# check_call(timeout=60) and check for e.returncode == -9 instead.
# or look at call()[1] == -9.
proc.returncode = -9
time.sleep(0.001)
# Now that the process died, reset the cursor and read the file.
buff.seek(0)
out = [buff.read(), None]
return out, proc.returncode
def check_call(args, **kwargs):
"""Similar to subprocess.check_call() but use call() instead.
This permits to include more details in CalledProcessError().
Runs a command and throws an exception if the command failed.
Returns communicate() tuple.
"""
out, returncode = call(args, **kwargs)
if returncode:
raise CalledProcessError(
returncode, args, kwargs.get('cwd'), out[0], out[1])
return out
def capture(args, **kwargs):
"""Captures stdout of a process call and returns it.
Similar to check_output() excepts that it discards return code.
Discards communicate()[1]. By default sets stderr=STDOUT.
"""
if kwargs.get('stderr') is None:
kwargs['stderr'] = STDOUT
return call(args, stdout=PIPE, **kwargs)[0][0]
def check_output(args, **kwargs):
"""Captures stdout of a process call and returns it.
Discards communicate()[1]. By default sets stderr=STDOUT.
Throws if return code is not 0.
Works even prior to python 2.7.
"""
if kwargs.get('stderr') is None:
kwargs['stderr'] = STDOUT
return check_call(args, stdout=PIPE, **kwargs)[0]